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{{Short description|Type of mercenary infantry in 16th-17th century Europe}} |
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[[Image:Landsknechte.jpg|360px|thumb|Landsknechts, [[etching]] by [[Daniel Hopfer]], ''c.'' 1530.]] |
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{{Italic title}} |
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'''Landsknechts''' (singular '''Landsknecht''', German plural '''Landsknechte''', sometimes also in English publications) were European, most often [[Germany|German]], [[mercenary]] [[pikeman|pikemen]] and supporting [[infantry|foot soldier]]s from the late 15th to the late 16th century, and achieved the reputation for being the universal mercenary of the [[Europe]]an [[Renaissance]]. |
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{{For|the card game sometimes called Landsknecht and reputedly played by the {{lang|de|Landsknechte}}|Lansquenet}} |
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[[File:Five German Soldiers MET DP822162.jpg|thumb|upright=1.7|''Landsknechte'', [[etching]] by [[Daniel Hopfer]], ''c.'' 1530]] |
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The '''{{lang|de|Landsknechte}}''' (singular: {{lang|de|Landsknecht}}, {{IPA|de|ˈlantsknɛçt|pron}}), also rendered as '''Landsknechts''' or '''Lansquenets''', were German mercenaries used in [[pike and shot]] formations during the [[early modern period]]. Consisting predominantly of [[pikemen]] and supporting foot soldiers, their front line was formed by ''[[Doppelsöldner]]'' ("double-pay men") renowned for their use of ''[[Zweihänder]]'' and [[arquebus]]. They formed the bulk of the [[Holy Roman Empire|Holy Roman Empire's]] [[Imperial Army (Holy Roman Empire)|Imperial Army]] from the late 15th century to the early 17th century, fighting in the [[French-Habsburg rivalry|Habsburg-Valois wars]], the [[Habsburg-Ottoman wars]], and the [[European wars of religion]]. |
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Although prone to mutiny if unpaid and divided within their ranks between [[Catholics]] and [[Lutherans]], the ''Landsknechte'' were well-armed and experienced warriors, recruitable in large numbers throughout Germany and Austria by the [[Holy Roman Emperor]]. This guaranteed both quantity and quality to the Imperial military for a century and a half. At their peak during the reign of [[Charles V of Habsburg]], and under the leadership of notable captains such as [[Georg von Frundsberg]] and [[Nicholas, Count of Salm|Nicholas of Salm]], the Imperial Landsknechts obtained important successes such as the capture of the French King [[Francis I of France|Francis I]] at the [[Battle of Pavia]] in 1525 and the resistance against the Ottoman Turks led by [[Suleiman the Magnificent]] at the [[Siege of Vienna (1529)|Siege of Vienna]] in 1529, while also being responsible for the [[Sack of Rome (1527)|Sack of Rome]] in 1527. |
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==Etymology== |
==Etymology== |
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[[File:Geschichte des Kostüms (1905) (14761439186).jpg|thumb|Image of {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} in the ''Geschichte des Kostüms'']] |
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The term is from [[German language|German]], ''Land'' "land, country" + ''Knecht'' "servant", recorded from ca. 1480. It was originally coined by [[Peter von Hagenbach]] and intended to indicate soldiers of the [[Swabia|lowlands]] of the [[Holy Roman Empire]] as opposed to the [[Swiss mercenaries]]. As early as 1500 the misleading spelling of ''Lanzknecht'' became common because of the association with ''Lanze'' "[[lance]]". |
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The Germanic compound {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} (earlier ''Lantknecht'', without [[Fugen-s|Fugen-"s"]]) combines ''[[Wikt:Land|Land]]'' and ''[[Wikt:Knecht|Knecht]]'' to form "servant of the land".{{sfn|Rogers|2010|p=485}}{{sfn|Jörgensen|Pavkovic|Rice|Schneid|2006|p=11}} The compound ''Lantknecht'' was used during the 15th century for bailiffs or [[court usher]]s. |
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The word {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} first appeared in the [[German language]] circa 1470 to describe certain troops in the army of [[Charles the Bold|Charles]], [[Duke of Burgundy]]. As early as 1500, the term was morphed into ''Lanzknecht'', referring to the unit's use of the [[pike (weapon)|pike]] as its main weapon.{{sfn|Miller|1976|p=3}} |
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The term '''"[[Landser]]"''' is directly based on Landsknecht, as is the name of the [[France|French]] card game. |
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==History== |
==History== |
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[[File:Karl von Blaas - Kaiser Maximilian I. und Georg von Frundsberg - 2725 - Kunsthistorisches Museum.jpg|thumb|left|''Kaiser Maximilian I. und Georg von Frundsberg'', depicting [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Maximilian I]] and [[Georg von Frundsberg]], founders of the Landsknechte, by Karl von Blaas. 1868. Kunsthistorisches Museum.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Axelrod |first1=Alan |title=Mercenaries: A Guide to Private Armies and Private Military Companies |date=2013 |publisher=CQ Press |isbn=9781483364674 |page=124 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lX9ZDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT124 |access-date=20 September 2021 |archive-date=26 September 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210926204224/https://books.google.com/books?id=lX9ZDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT124 |url-status=live }}</ref>]] |
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The first ''Landsknecht'' [[regiment]]s were formed by [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Maximilian I]]. He called upon [[Georg von Frundsberg]], known by many as the ''Father of the Landsknechts'', to assist him in their organization. They later went on to fight in almost every 16th century [[military campaign]], sometimes on both sides of the engagement. |
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The landsknechts, formed in conscious imitation of the [[Swiss mercenaries]] (and, initially, using Swiss instructors), eventually contributed to the defeat of the redoubtable Swiss whose battle formations, overly-dependent on hand to hand fighting, became vulnerable to the increased fire power of [[arquebus]] and [[artillery]]. French artillery or Spanish firepower dealt serious blows to the Swiss formations, and the Landsknecht pike blocks were there to fight off the depleted Swiss attack columns once this had occurred. |
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[[Image:Standard bearer fighting against five landsknechts.jpg|thumb|left|240px|Standard bearer fighting against five landsknechts, etching by [[Daniel Hopfer]]]] |
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The Landsknechts, although rather conservative themselves in weapons usage, and always containing a large majority of pikemen, were more predisposed to the tactical employment of firearms than the Swiss were because Landsknechts relied less on the precipitous rush to close combat and, as Imperial soldiers, they also often fought in formations mixed with Spaniards, who made widespread use of the arquebus and, later, musket. |
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Over the [[Burgundian Wars]], the well-organized and supplied armies of [[Charles the Bold]] were defeated again and again by the [[Swiss Confederation]],{{sfn|Richards|2002|p=4}} which wielded an ''ad hoc'' militia army.{{sfn|Trim|2010|p=59}} Charles's army lacked ''[[esprit de corps]]'' because of its composition by feudal lords, mercenaries, and levied gentry. The Swiss army, though poorly organized, were highly motivated, aggressive, and well-trained with their arms. The [[Swiss pikemen]], called {{lang|de|Reisläufer}}, repeatedly defeated and eventually killed Charles, eliminating Burgundy as a European power.{{sfn|Richards|2002|pp=4–5}} Archduke [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Maximilian]], who became co-ruler of Burgundian lands in 1477 by marrying [[Mary of Burgundy]],{{sfn|Trim|2010|p=162}} was greatly influenced by the Swiss victories. When the French contested the inheritance, Maximilian levied a Flemish army and defeated the French in 1479 at the [[Battle of Guinegate (1479)|Battle of Guinegate]], mixing Swiss-styled square infantry formation and Hussite [[wagon fort]]s tactics.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Querengässer |first1=Alexander |title=Before the Military Revolution: European Warfare and the Rise of the Early Modern State 1300–1490 |date=30 September 2021 |publisher=Oxbow Books |isbn=978-1-78925-672-7 |page=152 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RPE1EAAAQBAJ&pg=PA152 |access-date=16 February 2022 |language=en}}</ref> The dissolution of his levied army at war's end found Maximilian wanting a permanent and organized military force like the Confederation's to protect his domain.{{sfn|Richards|2002|p=6}} The existing Burgundian structure was inadequate to this end, however,{{sfn|Trim|2010|p=163}} and moreover the French wielded a monopoly on the hiring of {{lang|de|Reisläufer}}.{{sfn|Jörgensen|Pavkovic|Rice|Schneid|2006|p=11}} |
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The landsknechts typically came from [[Swabia]], [[Alsace]], [[Flanders]], and the [[Rhineland]], but ultimately the regiments were made up of men from all parts of Europe. |
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Maximilian began raising the first {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} units in 1486,{{sfn|Jörgensen|Pavkovic|Rice|Schneid|2006|p=11}} amassing 6,000–8,000 mercenaries. One of these units he gave to [[Eitel Friedrich II, Count of Hohenzollern]], who trained them with Swiss instructors in [[Bruges]] in 1487 to become the "[[Black Band (landsknechts)|Black Guard]]"{{efn|The Black Guard, formed to defend the Habsburg Low Countries, fought around the [[North Sea]] until being annihilated at the [[Battle of Hemmingstedt]] after twelve years of service.{{sfn|Richards|2002|p=7}}}} – the first {{lang|de|Landsknechte}}.{{sfn|Richards|2002|p=7}} In 1488, Maximilian organized the [[Swabian League]], creating an army of 12,000 infantry and 1,200 cavalry to deter [[Duchy of Bavaria|Bavaria]] and [[Kingdom of Bohemia|Bohemia]]. This is considered to be the first {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} army to be raised in Germany.{{sfn|Miller|1976|p=3}} Maximilian raised a strong army for the Austrian-Hungarian War of 1490, and succeeded in driving the Hungarians out of Austria. The {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} in his army refused to serve after sacking [[Stuhlweissenburg]] (now Székesfehérvár, [[Hungary]]), citing lack of pay and stopping Maximilian's advance on Buda. To prevent a repeat of Stuhlweissenburg, Maximilian now sought to homogenize the {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} into a fully professional, and mostly Germanic military force.{{sfn|Richards|2002|pp=7–8}} |
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Their battlefield behavior was highly variable. Sometimes, such as at the [[Battle of Pavia]], they performed very well, being instrumental to the Emperor's victory. However, on many other occasions, (such as in the later [[Italian Wars]], [[French Wars of Religion]] and the [[Eighty Years War]]) their bravery and discipline came under severe criticism, and the Spanish elements of the Imperial army regularly deprecated the battlefield usefulness of the Landsknechts—it was said that the [[Fernando Álvarez de Toledo y Pimentel, 3rd Duke of Alba|Duke of Alba]] hired them only to deny the Dutch enemy of their service, and put them on display to swell his numbers, not intending to fight with them. The [[Huguenots]] scorned their landsknecht mercenaries after these were immediately routed by the battered Swiss mercenary pike block they had been sent to finish off at the [[Battle of Dreux]]. |
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[[File:Standard bearer fighting against five landsknechts.jpg|thumb|Standard bearer fighting against five {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} (etching by [[Daniel Hopfer]])]] |
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In the 1490s, the well-trained {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} managed to defeat significantly greater Frisian armies. {{ill|Paul Dolnstein|de}} wrote of the siege of [[New Älvsborg|Älvsborg Fortress]] in July 1502, fighting for the king of Denmark: "We were 1800 Germans, and we were attacked by 15000 Swedish farmers ... we struck most of them dead."{{sfn|Richards|2002|p=51}} After the [[Battle of Novara (1513)|Battle of Novara]] in 1513, the Swiss executed the hundreds of German Landsknecht mercenaries they had captured who had fought for the French.{{sfn|Tucker|2010|p=481}} At the [[Battle of Bicocca]] and the [[Battle of Marignano]] (1515), the {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} performed well, defeating the famed {{lang|de|Reisläufer}}. |
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==Organization== |
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[[Image:Landsknecht with his Wife.jpg|thumb|upright|''Landsknecht with his Wife''. [[Etching]] by [[Daniel Hopfer]]. Note the huge ''[[Zweihänder]]'' sword over his shoulder, and the smaller ''[[Katzbalger]]'' sword at his hip, both emblematic of the Landsknecht.]] |
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The regiments often expanded from 4,000 to 10,000 men according to circumstances, or even larger—the [[Black Band (landsknechts)|Black Band]], generally considered to have been a regiment of landsknechts, were 17,000 strong when raised by the French in 1515. It was this flexibility which allowed them to be used in various battle conditions. ''Oberste'' ([[colonel]]s) were given recruiting commissions by the Emperor to form regiments, with a lieutenant-colonel and various regimental staff, and units divided into ''[[Fähnlein]]s'' ([[company (military unit)|companies]]) with a ''[[Hauptmann]]'' ([[Captain (land)|captain]]) in charge, as well as [[lieutenant]]s and ''[[Fähnrich]]e'' ([[Ensign (rank)|ensign]]s). Other ranks included ''majors of the [[court-martial]]'' and officers in charge of [[camp follower]]s. |
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[[File:Manif. di bruxelles su dis.di bernart von orley, IGMN144483, 1526-31.JPG|thumb|330px|{{lang|de|Landsknecht}} mercenaries with [[arquebus]]es (''Tapestries of the [[Battle of Pavia]]'' by [[Bernard van Orley]], between 1528 and 1531)]] |
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The ''[[Tross]]'' were the camp followers or "baggage train" who traveled with each Landsknecht unit, carrying the military necessities, the food and the belongings of each soldier and his family. Members of the ''Tross'' were made up of women, children and some craftsmen. |
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The Imperial {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} were instrumental in many of the Emperor's victories, including the decisive [[Battle of Pavia]] in 1525. The same year, they also managed to defeat the [[German Peasants' War|peasants' revolt]] in the Empire. At their peak in the early 16th century, the {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} were considered formidable soldiers who were often brave and loyal. However, these qualities may have declined afterward. The {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} were also employed by [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|the Habsburg emperor]] and [[Kingdom of Valencia|the royal Valencian authorities]] in the suppression of the [[First Revolt of Espadà (1526)|First Revolt of Espadà of 1526]], which took place in [[Serra d'Espadà|the mountains of Espadà]], in [[Province of Castellón|modern-day Spanish Castelló province]] (then in the [[Crown of Aragon|Aragonese]] [[Kingdom of Valencia]]), where thousands of [[Kingdom of Valencia|Valencian]] [[Morisco|Muslim]] [[Peasant|''fellah''s]] took up arms against [[Forced conversions of Muslims in Spain#In the Crown of Aragon|the decree of forced conversion issued that very year by the emperor]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Fuster i Ortells|first=Joan|date=1962|title=Nosaltres, els valencians|publisher=Edicions 62|page=75}}</ref> |
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[[File:Battle Scene, after Hans Holbein the Younger.jpg|thumb|upright=1.5|{{lang|de|[[Reisläufer]]}} and {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} engaged in a [[push of pike]] (engraving by [[Hans Holbein the Younger]], early 16th century)]] |
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==Weapons== |
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Landsknechts were trained in the use of the famous long [[Pike (weapon)|pike]]s and used the [[pike square]] formations developed by the [[Swiss]]. The majority of Landsknechts would use pikes, but others, meant to provide tactical assistance to the pikemen, accordingly used different weapons. For example, an experienced Landsknecht could be designated a ''[[Doppelsöldner]]'', and instead of wielding a pike as did more recent recruits, would employ a {{convert|6|to|8|ft|m|adj=mid|-long}} [[halberd]] or [[Partisan (weapon)|partisan]], or, more famously, a ''[[Zweihänder]]''(literally translated: "Two-hander"), a [[two-handed sword]] as long as 180 cm (6 ft), although it was generally called at the time a ''[[Zweihänder|Bidenhänder]]''(literally translated: "both-hander") rather than a ''Zweihänder''.<ref>http://www.thearma.org/essays/2HGS.html Bidenhander sword</ref> These great war swords could be used to hack off the heads of enemy pikes; or more likely to knock the pikes aside, creating disorder among the tightly arranged enemy pikemen in order to break through their lines. |
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[[Image:Ernst I. von Baden-Durlach.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Ernst Friedrich, margrave of [[Baden-Durlach]]]] |
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However, this tactic seems to have been of limited value, and was possibly dropped after around 1510 (although pictorial evidence of the use of these swords in the front lines exists until at least late into the 16th century) - their Swiss adversaries had specifically prohibited it when they went over to widespread use of the pike in the early 15th century, because the weapon was too large to use in constricted pike warfare. "Doppelsöldner" meant "double mercenary", because they were paid double the wages of their less experienced counterparts. Landsknechts also used [[Kriegsmesser]] longswords, in German translating to ''War knife,'' a long curved sword clasped to the belt, the blade shown naked without a scabbard in some woodcuts from (1500–1520). |
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They are attested as deployed in the armies of Kings [[John III of Navarre]] and successor [[Henry II of Navarre]] during their [[Spanish conquest of Iberian Navarre|campaigns to reconquer Navarre]] (1512–1524). In the same context, they are also found fighting on Charles V's side (battle for [[Hondarribia]], 1521–1524) where they performed strongly. They also served in high numbers in the Imperial army during the campaigns of Austria (1532), France (1542), [[Schmalkaldic League|Germanic Reformed League]] (1547) and in of all the Italian wars. Others also fought on the [[Ottoman–Habsburg wars|Habsburg-Ottoman frontier]]. |
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[[File:Design for a Stained Glass Window for Christoph von Eberstein, by Hans Holbein the Younger.jpg|thumb|upright|Design for a stained-glass window commemorating the landsknecht Christoph von Eberstein, by [[Hans Holbein the Younger]]]] |
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Other Landsknechts would use the [[arquebus]], the precursor to the [[musket]]. When the Landsknechts were first formed, [[arquebusiers]] composed up to an eighth of the total number of soldiers, but the number gradually grew to be about a quarter.{{Citation needed|date=September 2008}} |
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The [[Imperial Army (Holy Roman Empire)|army of the Holy Roman Emperor]] defeated the French army in Italy, but funds were not available to pay the soldiers. The 34,000 Imperial troops mutinied and forced their commander, [[Charles III, Duke of Bourbon]], to lead them towards Rome. The [[Sack of Rome (1527)|Sack of Rome]] in 1527 was executed by some 6,000 Spaniards under the Duke, 14,000 {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} under Georg von Frundsberg, some Italian infantry and some cavalry. |
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The universal Landsknecht weapon was a short sword called a ''[[Katzbalger]]'', carried in addition to the Landsknecht's main weapon. Indeed, the ''Katzbalger'' was seen as the very symbol of the Landsknecht, Swiss illustrators being careful to depict it to indicate that a mercenary was a Landsknecht rather than a [[Swiss mercenaries|Reisläufer]]. |
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Terence McIntosh comments that the expansionist, aggressive policy pursued by Maximilian I and [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles V]] at the inception of the early modern German nation (although not to further the aims specific to the German nation per se), mainly relying on German manpower as well as utilizing fearsome ''Landsknecht'' and other mercenaries (with the Battle of Pavia and atrocities like the Sack of Rome being associated with them), would affect the way neighbours viewed the German polity, although in the longue durée, Germany tended to be at peace.<ref>{{cite web |title=H-German Roundtable on Smith, Germany: A Nation in Its Time Before, During, and After Nationalism, 1500–2000 H-German H-Net |url=https://networks.h-net.org/node/35008/discussions/9589141/h-german-roundtable-smith-germany-nation-its-time-during-and |website=networks.h-net.org |access-date=5 February 2022}}</ref> |
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Landsknechts were a very powerful force due to powerful weaponry. Landsknecht Paul Dolstein said in July 1502 "We were 1800 Germans and were attacked by 15000 Swedish peasants...we struck most of them dead." He was fighting for the King of Denmark at the time.{{Citation needed|date=February 2010}} |
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From the 1560s on, after the death of Frundsberg, the reputation of the {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} steadily decreased.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Riemann|first=Malte|title="As Old as War Itself"? Historicizing the Universal Mercenary|journal=Journal of Global Security Studies|year=2021|volume=6|pages=|doi=10.1093/jogss/ogz069|doi-access=free}}</ref> In the [[French Wars of Religion]] and the [[Eighty Years War]], their bravery and discipline came under criticism, and the Spanish elements of the army of Flanders regularly deprecated the battlefield usefulness of the {{lang|de|Landsknechte}}, somewhat unfairly. Their status also suffered from the rising reputation of the dreaded Spanish [[tercios]] who, however, were far less abundant and more expensive to train. When serving in southern Europe, {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} were still considered elite troops. In the army of the Dutch rebels, many German mercenaries were hired but were forced to give up some {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} traditions in order to increase their discipline in river crossing and their naval fighting abilities. Increasing ill-discipline within the ranks saw them replaced with an improved system of raising a German army, the ''Kaiserlicher Fussknecht'', which was far less reliant on mercenaries.{{sfn|Miller|1976|p=33}} |
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==Clothes== |
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What made the landsknechts so conspicuous was their elaborate dress, which they adopted from the Swiss, but later took to even more dramatic excess. Maximilian I exempted them from the prevalent sumptuary laws as an acknowledgement of their "...short and brutish" lives.<ref>http://www.st-max.org/introduction-edu.htm Rachel Ward - Introduction page - Saint Maximilian Landsknecht Reenactment Guild: "The Landsknechts were exempt from the sumptuary laws regulating clothing styles that other citizens had to follow. Maximilian granted them this dispensation because their lives tended to be so 'short and brutish.'"</ref> |
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==Organization and recruitment== |
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[[Doublet (clothing)|Doublet]]s (or Wams), deliberately slashed at the front, back and sleeves with shirts and other wear pulled through to form puffs of different-colored fabric, so-called [[1500-1550 in fashion|puffed and slashed]]; [[parti-colored]] hose (or Gesses); [[Jerkin (garment)|jerkin]]s (or Lederwams); ever-broader flat [[beret]]-type [[hat]]s (or Tellerbarrets) with tall feathers; and broad flat [[shoe]]s, made them bodies of men that could not be mistaken. |
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[[File:Ernst I. von Baden-Durlach.jpg|thumb|right|[[Ernest Frederick, Margrave of Baden-Durlach|Ernst Friedrich]], Margrave of [[Baden-Durlach]], wearing {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} dress. His [[greave]]s, however, are atypical of {{lang|de|Landsknecht}}.]] |
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The ''Landsknechte'', often recruited from South Germany, came from a society with exploding population growth, increasing unemployment, diverse cultural factors and depleting hierarchical structure (unlike the tightly organized society of the Swiss). In addition to dispossessed craftmen and peasants, there were burghers, aristocrats and runaway serfs as well. They were also used to freedom of carrying weapons. The result was that soldiers leaned towards a libertine (and also brutal) lifestyle. Thus, the role of the regiment, leadership by example (commanders tended to dismount to fight with the troops) and harsh discipline (involving capital punishment) were emphasized to compensate.{{sfn|Karsten|1998|pp=20–23}} |
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As with the {{lang|de|Reisläufer}}, a [[regiment]] (a typical ''Landsknecht'' regiment consisted of 4,000 men{{sfn|Karsten|1998|pp=20–23}}) of {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} was raised by a lord with a [[letter patent]] (''Bestallungsbrief'') that named the unit [[colonel]] (''Obrist''). This document laid out the size and structure of the unit, the pay of its men, and contained its [[Articles of War]] (''Artikelsbriefe''). Upon accepting the commission and securing funding, either through a bank loan or a grant from the lord, the colonel assembled his chain of command. His [[Feldhauptmann|captains]], once appointed, would then go to a locality he knew with [[Drummer (military)|drummers]] and fifers. Recruits gathered at a specified place and time for the [[Muster (military)|muster]]. There, they would parade under an arch and be inspected by the colonel and his captains, then be paid their first months' salary. The colonel next read the ''Bestallungsbrief'' in full to the soldiers, who then swore oaths of allegiance to cause, officers, and the [[Holy Roman Emperor|Emperor]]. This ceremony also saw the appointing of the unit staff and its standard bearers, or ''[[Fähnrich]]e'' ([[Ensign (rank)|ensign]]s), who swore to never lose the standard.{{sfn|Miller|1976|pp=4–5}}{{Sfn|Richards|2002|pp=9, 10–11, 13–15}}{{sfn|Jörgensen|Pavkovic|Rice|Schneid|2006|p=11–12}} |
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The colonel was the highest–ranking officer in a regiment, but if his force contained more than one regiment he could become a ''Generalobrist''. If it contained cavalry and artillery in addition to its infantry, then he could be a ''Feldobrist'' or ''Generalfeldobrist''.{{sfn|Richards|2002|p=10}} The regiment would be commanded by a [[lieutenant colonel]] in the colonel's stead. The regiment itself was formed by ten ''[[Fähnlein]]'', equivalent to a [[Company (military unit)|company]] and commanded by a captain. A ''Fähnlein'' was made up by 400 men, including 100 veterans. ''Rotten'', equivalent to a [[platoon]], were the building blocks of the ''Fähnlein'' and contained either ten ordinary {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} or six ''Doppelsöldner'', led by a ''Rottmeister'' elected by his unit. In totality, the regiment averaged 4,000 men;{{efn|"Regiment" originally referred to the force the colonel controlled, but by 1550 meant a formation of 3,000–5,000 men.{{sfn|Richards|2002|p=11}}}} ten ''Fähnlein'', containing 40 ''Rotten''. Unit [[sergeant major]]s, called ''[[Feldwebel|Feldweibel]]'', were tasked with training [[Foot drill|drill]] and formation. The regimental sergeant major, ''Oberster-Feldweibel'' was responsible for drill on the battlefield. ''Rotten'' sergeants, ''Weibel'', were charged with ensuring discipline and relaying liaisons between enlisted men and their officers. One of these men, the ''Gemeinweibel'', was the spokesman for the men and was elected monthly.{{sfn|Miller|1976|pp=4–5}} |
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According to Imperial law, a colonel could have a staff of 22 officers but in practice this depended on the colonel's wealth.{{sfn|Richards|2002|p=10}} Included in that staff were a chaplain, a [[scribe]], a doctor, a scout, his personal quartermaster and ensign, a drummer and [[fifer]], and a bodyguard (''[[Trabant (military)|Trabant]]en'') of eight men. Captains also had a staff that included much of the same, but with additional musicians and two ''Doppelsöldner'' to protect him. A [[provost marshal]] and ''[[Schultheiss]]'' were appointed by the colonel to maintain military discipline and to prosecute the ''Artikelsbriefe'' respectively. The provost was unimpeachable, and feared. Harsh punishments could be expected for offenses such as [[mutiny]] or drunkenness on duty. A provost had a retinue of a jailer, bailiff, and executioner (''Freimann'').{{sfn|Miller|1976|pp=4–5}}{{Sfn|Richards|2002|pp=10–11}} |
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===Equipment=== |
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[[File:Landsknecht 1.JPG|thumb|right|{{lang|de|Landsknecht}} with a ''[[Zweihänder]]'']] |
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Just like the {{lang|de|Reisläufer}}, {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} formations consisted of men trained and armed with [[Pike (weapon)|pikes]], [[halberds]], and swords.{{sfn|Trim|2010|p=163}} 300 men of a ''Fähnlein'' would be armed with a pike,{{sfn|Miller|1976|p=11}} though a {{lang|de|Landsknecht}}'s pike was generally shorter than a {{lang|de|Reisläufer}}'s at about {{convert|4.2|m|ft|sp=us}}.{{sfn|Jörgensen|Pavkovic|Rice|Schneid|2006|p=12}} Experienced and well-equipped soldiers, receiving double a normal {{lang|de|Landsknecht}}'s pay and getting the title ''[[Doppelsöldner]]'',{{sfn|Richards|2002|p=13}} made up a quarter of each ''Fähnlein''. 50 of these men were armed with a halberd or with a {{convert|66|in|cm|adj=on}} [[two-handed sword]] called a ''[[Zweihänder]]'' while another fifty were [[arquebusiers]] or [[crossbowmen]]. The focus on firearms, rather than crossbows, as ordained by Maximilian, was where they were different from the Swiss.{{sfn|Axelrod|2013|p=214}} Maximilian abolished the crossbow in military use in 1517 (although other countries continued to use them).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Nickel |first1=Helmut |last2=Pyhrr |first2=Stuart W. |last3=Tarassuk |first3=Leonid |title=The Art of Chivalry: European Arms and Armor from the Metropolitan Museum of Art : an Exhibition |date=1982 |publisher=Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York) |isbn=978-0-917418-67-9 |page=129 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3BZvJXJ4qRUC&pg=PA129 |access-date=17 February 2022 |language=en}}</ref> |
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Most {{lang|de|Landsknechte}}, regardless of primary weapon, carried a short sword called a ''[[Katzbalger]]'' for close combat.{{sfn|Jörgensen|Pavkovic|Rice|Schneid|2006|p=12}}{{sfn|Miller|1976|pp=11, 12}} By the end of the 16th century, however, the number of pikemen in a ''Fähnlein'' had diminished to around 200.{{sfn|Miller|1976|p=12}} |
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===Tactics=== |
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They also copied the Swiss in tactics.{{sfn|Trim|2010|p=163}} {{lang|de|Landsknechte}} fought in a [[pike square]] they called the ''gevierte Ordnung'',{{sfn|Jörgensen|Pavkovic|Rice|Schneid|2006|p=12}}{{sfn|Miller|1976|p=7}} forty to sixty men deep.{{sfn|Trim|2010|p=163}} ''Doppelsöldnern'' made up the formation's first two ranks. Then came the ensigns, and then the squares themselves. Pikemen, supported by halberdiers, formed the square while swordsmen made up their front and rear. The most experienced soldiers were located at the back of the formation and arquebusiers were placed on its flanks. In the attack, a band of soldiers called a [[forlorn hope]] preceded the pike square to break enemy pikes.{{sfn|Jörgensen|Pavkovic|Rice|Schneid|2006|p=12}}{{sfn|Miller|1976|pp=7–8}} |
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The pikemen were supported by [[halberdiers]], who would rush a gap in an opposing line,{{sfn|Rogers|2010|p=487}} a tactic also copied from the Swiss.{{sfn|Jörgensen|Pavkovic|Rice|Schneid|2006|p=8}} As their solidarity grew, commanders emphasized finesse and timing, rather than the head-down battering charge of the Swiss.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Karsten |first1=Peter |title=The Training and Socializing of Military Personnel |date=1998 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-0-8153-2976-3 |page=23 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SKy5-Mn4X3cC&pg=PA20 |access-date=16 February 2022 |language=en}}</ref> |
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As the ''Landsknechte's'' fighting techniques were developed, they no longer preferred fighting along a straight line (as exercised by even the Swiss until the end of the fifteenth century), but leaned towards a circle-wise movement that enhanced the use of the space around the combatant and allowed them to attack the opponents from different angles. The circle-wise formation described by [[Jean Molinet]] as the "snail" would become the hallmark of ''Landsknechte's'' combat. The new types of combat also required the maintenance of a stable bodily equilibrium. Maximilian, an innovator of these types of movements, also saw value in their effects over the maintenance of group discipline (apart from the control of centralised institutions). As Maximilian and his commanders sought to popularize these forms of movements (which only became daily practice at the end of the fifteenth century and gained dominance after Maximilian's death in 1519), he promoted them in tournaments, in fencing and in dancing as well. The courtly festivals became a playground for innovations, foreshadowing developments in military practices.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kleinschmidt |first1=Harald |title=The Military and Dancing Changing Norms and Behaviour, 15th to 18th Century |journal=Ethnologia Europaea |date=1995 |volume=25 |issue=2 |pages=157–176 |doi=10.16995/ee.843 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/346321925 |access-date=21 November 2021 |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Silver |first1=Larry |last2=Smith |first2=Jeffrey Chipps |title=The Essential Durer |date=29 November 2011 |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |isbn=978-0-8122-0601-2 |page=139 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lQZ83r_u9LQC&pg=PA139 |access-date=21 November 2021 |language=en}}</ref> |
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==Camp== |
==Camp== |
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[[File:Landsknecht with his Wife.jpg|thumb|upright|''{{lang|de|Landsknecht}} with his Wife'', by [[Daniel Hopfer]]. Note the ''[[Zweihänder]]'' over his shoulder and the smaller ''[[Katzbalger]]'' at his hip.]] |
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Landsknechts adopted the [[Hussite]] tactic of creating a ring of limbers and wagons, surrounded by cannon, with the encampment in the middle. While in strong positions like this, many Landsknechts lived in tents; however, in more makeshift situations, they would often build crude huts made of straw and mud supported by [[Pike]]s and [[Halberd]]s. [[Commissioned officers]] would always sleep in tents on campaign. Quarrels and disease would go about the camp, and if the landsknechts had been defeated in the battle the camp followers had little time to escape before rape and plunder took place. However, it was usually secure from the enemy. |
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The ''[[Tross]]'' were the camp followers or baggage train who travelled with each {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} unit, carrying military necessities, the food, and the belongings of each soldier and his family. The ''Tross'' was made up of women, children and some craftsmen. Women and young boys set up {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} camps, cooked, mended injuries, and dug and cleaned latrines.{{sfn|Richards|2002|pp=26–27}} A {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} was usually forbidden by his ''Bestallungsbrief'' from having more than one woman in the baggage train.{{sfn|Miller|1976|p=4}} The ''Tross'' was overseen by a "whore's sergeant" (''Hurenweibel'').{{sfn|Richards|2002|p=11}} |
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==Modern image== |
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==See also== |
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There are Landsknecht associations in various [[Europe|European countries]], as well as in the [[United States]], which promote interest in the [[Renaissance]] tradition of the landsknechts and who often stage revivals and festivals. The action film ''[[Flesh & Blood (film)|Flesh & Blood]]'' portrays a group of Landsknecht and their fictional adventures in Italy. In the games [[Age of Empires 3]], [[Europa Universalis 3]] and [[Medieval 2: Total War]], Landsknechts can be hired to fight for one's own use. In [[Civilization IV]], Landsknechts act as the unique unit for the Holy Roman civilization. In [[Civilization V]] and [[Rise of Nations]] Landsknechts are the unique unit of Germany, replacing pikemen. In the [[Etrian Odyssey]] series, Landsknecht is a playable class. The [[Warhammer Fantasy Battles]] Imperial Greatswords have been modelled after Landsknechts. they also feature in the game [[Bladestorm: The Hundred Years' War]] . |
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* [[Peter Hagendorf]], a Landsknecht whose diary from 1625 to 1649 has survived |
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* [[Burgmann]] |
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* [[Feldhauptmann]] |
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* [[Free company]] |
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* [[Freikorps]] |
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* [[Trabant (military)]] |
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* [[Heerhaufen]] |
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* [[Kabukimono]], [[samurai]] gangs also known for their extravagant dress |
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* [[Lansquenet]], a card-game with the French spelling of {{lang|de|Landsknecht}} |
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== |
==Notes== |
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{{notelist}} |
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*[[Tross]] |
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*[[Tercio]] |
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*[[Burgmann]] |
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*[[Doppelsöldner]] |
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*[[Katzbalger]] |
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== |
===Citations=== |
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{{reflist|20em}} |
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<references/> |
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==References== |
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== External links == |
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{{refbegin}} |
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{{commons|Landsknecht|Landsknecht}} |
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* {{cite book|last1=Jörgensen|first1=Christer|last2=Pavkovic|first2=Michael F.|last3=Rice|first3=Rob S.|last4=Schneid|first4=Frederick C.|last5=Scott|first5=Chris L.|title=Fighting Techniques of the Early Modern World|year=2006|publisher=[[Thomas Dunne Books]]|isbn=0-312-34819-3}} |
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*[http://www.landsknecht.org/ Landsknecht.org], International Landsknecht enthusiast society. |
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* {{cite book|last=Miller|first=Douglas|title=The Landsknechts|publisher=Osprey Publishing|year=1976|isbn=0850452589}} |
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*[http://www.st-max.org Das Todesengel Faehnlein], St. Maximilian Landsknecht Re-enactment Guild in Northern California. |
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* {{cite book|last=Richards|first=John|title=Landsknecht Soldier 1486–1560|publisher=Osprey Publishing|year=2002|isbn=1841762431}} |
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*[http://www.fahnlein.com Das Heiligesturm Fahnlein], Website of Das Heiligesturm Fahnlein in Southern California. |
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* {{cite book|editor-last=Rogers|editor-first=Cliff|editor-link=Clifford J. Rogers|title=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology|volume=I|year=2010|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0195334036|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mzwpq6bLHhMC}} |
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*[http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.geocities.com/wolfgng13/index.html&date=2009-10-26+00:16:20 No Money No Landsknecht], Website of Wolfgang von Orlok, Landsknecht of the Bristol Renaissance Faire On the Illinois/Wisconsin Border. |
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* {{cite book|editor-last=Trim|editor-first=D.J.B.|title=European Warfare 1350–1750|year=2010|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-88628-4}} |
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*[http://www.theweebsite.com/ Landsknecht clothing] |
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*{{cite book |title=A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East |volume=II |editor-first=Spencer C. |editor-last=Tucker |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=2010 }} |
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*[http://www.arador.com/articles/pikemen.html Landsknecht Pikeman Armour], Arador Armour Library Article |
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{{refend}} |
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==External links== |
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[[Category:Warfare of the Early Modern era]] |
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* {{Commons category-inline|Landsknechts}} |
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[[Category:Landsknechts| ]] |
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* [https://www.britannica.com/topic/Landsknechte "Landsknechte"] at [[Encyclopedia Britannica]] |
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[[Category:Military units and formations of the Early Modern era]] |
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[[Category:16th and 17th century warrior types]] |
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{{Portal bar|Holy Roman Empire|Middle Ages}} |
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[[ar:لاندسكنيشت]] |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[ca:Lansquenet]] |
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[[cs:Lancknecht]] |
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[[Category:Landsknechts| ]] |
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[[da:Landsknægt]] |
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[[Category:German words and phrases]] |
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[[de:Landsknecht]] |
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[[Category:Military history of the Holy Roman Empire]] |
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[[es:Lansquenete]] |
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[[Category:Military units and formations established in the 15th century]] |
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[[fr:Lansquenet]] |
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[[Category:Pikes (weapon)]] |
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[[fy:Lânsfeint]] |
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[[it:Lanzichenecchi]] |
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[[he:לאנדסקנכט]] |
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[[la:Landsknecti]] |
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[[lt:Landsknechtai]] |
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[[ja:ランツクネヒト]] |
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[[pt:Lansquenê]] |
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[[ru:Ландскнехт]] |
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[[sr:Ландскнехти]] |
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[[ko:란츠크네흐트]] |
Latest revision as of 14:08, 31 October 2024
The Landsknechte (singular: Landsknecht, pronounced [ˈlantsknɛçt]), also rendered as Landsknechts or Lansquenets, were German mercenaries used in pike and shot formations during the early modern period. Consisting predominantly of pikemen and supporting foot soldiers, their front line was formed by Doppelsöldner ("double-pay men") renowned for their use of Zweihänder and arquebus. They formed the bulk of the Holy Roman Empire's Imperial Army from the late 15th century to the early 17th century, fighting in the Habsburg-Valois wars, the Habsburg-Ottoman wars, and the European wars of religion.
Although prone to mutiny if unpaid and divided within their ranks between Catholics and Lutherans, the Landsknechte were well-armed and experienced warriors, recruitable in large numbers throughout Germany and Austria by the Holy Roman Emperor. This guaranteed both quantity and quality to the Imperial military for a century and a half. At their peak during the reign of Charles V of Habsburg, and under the leadership of notable captains such as Georg von Frundsberg and Nicholas of Salm, the Imperial Landsknechts obtained important successes such as the capture of the French King Francis I at the Battle of Pavia in 1525 and the resistance against the Ottoman Turks led by Suleiman the Magnificent at the Siege of Vienna in 1529, while also being responsible for the Sack of Rome in 1527.
Etymology
[edit]The Germanic compound Landsknecht (earlier Lantknecht, without Fugen-"s") combines Land and Knecht to form "servant of the land".[1][2] The compound Lantknecht was used during the 15th century for bailiffs or court ushers.
The word Landsknecht first appeared in the German language circa 1470 to describe certain troops in the army of Charles, Duke of Burgundy. As early as 1500, the term was morphed into Lanzknecht, referring to the unit's use of the pike as its main weapon.[3]
History
[edit]Over the Burgundian Wars, the well-organized and supplied armies of Charles the Bold were defeated again and again by the Swiss Confederation,[5] which wielded an ad hoc militia army.[6] Charles's army lacked esprit de corps because of its composition by feudal lords, mercenaries, and levied gentry. The Swiss army, though poorly organized, were highly motivated, aggressive, and well-trained with their arms. The Swiss pikemen, called Reisläufer, repeatedly defeated and eventually killed Charles, eliminating Burgundy as a European power.[7] Archduke Maximilian, who became co-ruler of Burgundian lands in 1477 by marrying Mary of Burgundy,[8] was greatly influenced by the Swiss victories. When the French contested the inheritance, Maximilian levied a Flemish army and defeated the French in 1479 at the Battle of Guinegate, mixing Swiss-styled square infantry formation and Hussite wagon forts tactics.[9] The dissolution of his levied army at war's end found Maximilian wanting a permanent and organized military force like the Confederation's to protect his domain.[10] The existing Burgundian structure was inadequate to this end, however,[11] and moreover the French wielded a monopoly on the hiring of Reisläufer.[2]
Maximilian began raising the first Landsknecht units in 1486,[2] amassing 6,000–8,000 mercenaries. One of these units he gave to Eitel Friedrich II, Count of Hohenzollern, who trained them with Swiss instructors in Bruges in 1487 to become the "Black Guard"[a] – the first Landsknechte.[12] In 1488, Maximilian organized the Swabian League, creating an army of 12,000 infantry and 1,200 cavalry to deter Bavaria and Bohemia. This is considered to be the first Landsknecht army to be raised in Germany.[3] Maximilian raised a strong army for the Austrian-Hungarian War of 1490, and succeeded in driving the Hungarians out of Austria. The Landsknechte in his army refused to serve after sacking Stuhlweissenburg (now Székesfehérvár, Hungary), citing lack of pay and stopping Maximilian's advance on Buda. To prevent a repeat of Stuhlweissenburg, Maximilian now sought to homogenize the Landsknechte into a fully professional, and mostly Germanic military force.[13]
In the 1490s, the well-trained Landsknechte managed to defeat significantly greater Frisian armies. Paul Dolnstein wrote of the siege of Älvsborg Fortress in July 1502, fighting for the king of Denmark: "We were 1800 Germans, and we were attacked by 15000 Swedish farmers ... we struck most of them dead."[14] After the Battle of Novara in 1513, the Swiss executed the hundreds of German Landsknecht mercenaries they had captured who had fought for the French.[15] At the Battle of Bicocca and the Battle of Marignano (1515), the Landsknecht performed well, defeating the famed Reisläufer.
The Imperial Landsknechte were instrumental in many of the Emperor's victories, including the decisive Battle of Pavia in 1525. The same year, they also managed to defeat the peasants' revolt in the Empire. At their peak in the early 16th century, the Landsknechte were considered formidable soldiers who were often brave and loyal. However, these qualities may have declined afterward. The Landsknechte were also employed by the Habsburg emperor and the royal Valencian authorities in the suppression of the First Revolt of Espadà of 1526, which took place in the mountains of Espadà, in modern-day Spanish Castelló province (then in the Aragonese Kingdom of Valencia), where thousands of Valencian Muslim fellahs took up arms against the decree of forced conversion issued that very year by the emperor.[16]
They are attested as deployed in the armies of Kings John III of Navarre and successor Henry II of Navarre during their campaigns to reconquer Navarre (1512–1524). In the same context, they are also found fighting on Charles V's side (battle for Hondarribia, 1521–1524) where they performed strongly. They also served in high numbers in the Imperial army during the campaigns of Austria (1532), France (1542), Germanic Reformed League (1547) and in of all the Italian wars. Others also fought on the Habsburg-Ottoman frontier.
The army of the Holy Roman Emperor defeated the French army in Italy, but funds were not available to pay the soldiers. The 34,000 Imperial troops mutinied and forced their commander, Charles III, Duke of Bourbon, to lead them towards Rome. The Sack of Rome in 1527 was executed by some 6,000 Spaniards under the Duke, 14,000 Landsknechte under Georg von Frundsberg, some Italian infantry and some cavalry.
Terence McIntosh comments that the expansionist, aggressive policy pursued by Maximilian I and Charles V at the inception of the early modern German nation (although not to further the aims specific to the German nation per se), mainly relying on German manpower as well as utilizing fearsome Landsknecht and other mercenaries (with the Battle of Pavia and atrocities like the Sack of Rome being associated with them), would affect the way neighbours viewed the German polity, although in the longue durée, Germany tended to be at peace.[17]
From the 1560s on, after the death of Frundsberg, the reputation of the Landsknechte steadily decreased.[18] In the French Wars of Religion and the Eighty Years War, their bravery and discipline came under criticism, and the Spanish elements of the army of Flanders regularly deprecated the battlefield usefulness of the Landsknechte, somewhat unfairly. Their status also suffered from the rising reputation of the dreaded Spanish tercios who, however, were far less abundant and more expensive to train. When serving in southern Europe, Landsknechte were still considered elite troops. In the army of the Dutch rebels, many German mercenaries were hired but were forced to give up some Landsknecht traditions in order to increase their discipline in river crossing and their naval fighting abilities. Increasing ill-discipline within the ranks saw them replaced with an improved system of raising a German army, the Kaiserlicher Fussknecht, which was far less reliant on mercenaries.[19]
Organization and recruitment
[edit]The Landsknechte, often recruited from South Germany, came from a society with exploding population growth, increasing unemployment, diverse cultural factors and depleting hierarchical structure (unlike the tightly organized society of the Swiss). In addition to dispossessed craftmen and peasants, there were burghers, aristocrats and runaway serfs as well. They were also used to freedom of carrying weapons. The result was that soldiers leaned towards a libertine (and also brutal) lifestyle. Thus, the role of the regiment, leadership by example (commanders tended to dismount to fight with the troops) and harsh discipline (involving capital punishment) were emphasized to compensate.[20]
As with the Reisläufer, a regiment (a typical Landsknecht regiment consisted of 4,000 men[20]) of Landsknechte was raised by a lord with a letter patent (Bestallungsbrief) that named the unit colonel (Obrist). This document laid out the size and structure of the unit, the pay of its men, and contained its Articles of War (Artikelsbriefe). Upon accepting the commission and securing funding, either through a bank loan or a grant from the lord, the colonel assembled his chain of command. His captains, once appointed, would then go to a locality he knew with drummers and fifers. Recruits gathered at a specified place and time for the muster. There, they would parade under an arch and be inspected by the colonel and his captains, then be paid their first months' salary. The colonel next read the Bestallungsbrief in full to the soldiers, who then swore oaths of allegiance to cause, officers, and the Emperor. This ceremony also saw the appointing of the unit staff and its standard bearers, or Fähnriche (ensigns), who swore to never lose the standard.[21][22][23]
The colonel was the highest–ranking officer in a regiment, but if his force contained more than one regiment he could become a Generalobrist. If it contained cavalry and artillery in addition to its infantry, then he could be a Feldobrist or Generalfeldobrist.[24] The regiment would be commanded by a lieutenant colonel in the colonel's stead. The regiment itself was formed by ten Fähnlein, equivalent to a company and commanded by a captain. A Fähnlein was made up by 400 men, including 100 veterans. Rotten, equivalent to a platoon, were the building blocks of the Fähnlein and contained either ten ordinary Landsknechte or six Doppelsöldner, led by a Rottmeister elected by his unit. In totality, the regiment averaged 4,000 men;[b] ten Fähnlein, containing 40 Rotten. Unit sergeant majors, called Feldweibel, were tasked with training drill and formation. The regimental sergeant major, Oberster-Feldweibel was responsible for drill on the battlefield. Rotten sergeants, Weibel, were charged with ensuring discipline and relaying liaisons between enlisted men and their officers. One of these men, the Gemeinweibel, was the spokesman for the men and was elected monthly.[21]
According to Imperial law, a colonel could have a staff of 22 officers but in practice this depended on the colonel's wealth.[24] Included in that staff were a chaplain, a scribe, a doctor, a scout, his personal quartermaster and ensign, a drummer and fifer, and a bodyguard (Trabanten) of eight men. Captains also had a staff that included much of the same, but with additional musicians and two Doppelsöldner to protect him. A provost marshal and Schultheiss were appointed by the colonel to maintain military discipline and to prosecute the Artikelsbriefe respectively. The provost was unimpeachable, and feared. Harsh punishments could be expected for offenses such as mutiny or drunkenness on duty. A provost had a retinue of a jailer, bailiff, and executioner (Freimann).[21][26]
Equipment
[edit]Just like the Reisläufer, Landsknecht formations consisted of men trained and armed with pikes, halberds, and swords.[11] 300 men of a Fähnlein would be armed with a pike,[27] though a Landsknecht's pike was generally shorter than a Reisläufer's at about 4.2 meters (14 ft).[28] Experienced and well-equipped soldiers, receiving double a normal Landsknecht's pay and getting the title Doppelsöldner,[29] made up a quarter of each Fähnlein. 50 of these men were armed with a halberd or with a 66-inch (170 cm) two-handed sword called a Zweihänder while another fifty were arquebusiers or crossbowmen. The focus on firearms, rather than crossbows, as ordained by Maximilian, was where they were different from the Swiss.[30] Maximilian abolished the crossbow in military use in 1517 (although other countries continued to use them).[31] Most Landsknechte, regardless of primary weapon, carried a short sword called a Katzbalger for close combat.[28][32] By the end of the 16th century, however, the number of pikemen in a Fähnlein had diminished to around 200.[33]
Tactics
[edit]They also copied the Swiss in tactics.[11] Landsknechte fought in a pike square they called the gevierte Ordnung,[28][34] forty to sixty men deep.[11] Doppelsöldnern made up the formation's first two ranks. Then came the ensigns, and then the squares themselves. Pikemen, supported by halberdiers, formed the square while swordsmen made up their front and rear. The most experienced soldiers were located at the back of the formation and arquebusiers were placed on its flanks. In the attack, a band of soldiers called a forlorn hope preceded the pike square to break enemy pikes.[28][35]
The pikemen were supported by halberdiers, who would rush a gap in an opposing line,[36] a tactic also copied from the Swiss.[37] As their solidarity grew, commanders emphasized finesse and timing, rather than the head-down battering charge of the Swiss.[38]
As the Landsknechte's fighting techniques were developed, they no longer preferred fighting along a straight line (as exercised by even the Swiss until the end of the fifteenth century), but leaned towards a circle-wise movement that enhanced the use of the space around the combatant and allowed them to attack the opponents from different angles. The circle-wise formation described by Jean Molinet as the "snail" would become the hallmark of Landsknechte's combat. The new types of combat also required the maintenance of a stable bodily equilibrium. Maximilian, an innovator of these types of movements, also saw value in their effects over the maintenance of group discipline (apart from the control of centralised institutions). As Maximilian and his commanders sought to popularize these forms of movements (which only became daily practice at the end of the fifteenth century and gained dominance after Maximilian's death in 1519), he promoted them in tournaments, in fencing and in dancing as well. The courtly festivals became a playground for innovations, foreshadowing developments in military practices.[39][40]
Camp
[edit]The Tross were the camp followers or baggage train who travelled with each Landsknecht unit, carrying military necessities, the food, and the belongings of each soldier and his family. The Tross was made up of women, children and some craftsmen. Women and young boys set up Landsknecht camps, cooked, mended injuries, and dug and cleaned latrines.[41] A Landsknecht was usually forbidden by his Bestallungsbrief from having more than one woman in the baggage train.[42] The Tross was overseen by a "whore's sergeant" (Hurenweibel).[25]
See also
[edit]- Peter Hagendorf, a Landsknecht whose diary from 1625 to 1649 has survived
- Burgmann
- Feldhauptmann
- Free company
- Freikorps
- Trabant (military)
- Heerhaufen
- Kabukimono, samurai gangs also known for their extravagant dress
- Lansquenet, a card-game with the French spelling of Landsknecht
Notes
[edit]- ^ The Black Guard, formed to defend the Habsburg Low Countries, fought around the North Sea until being annihilated at the Battle of Hemmingstedt after twelve years of service.[12]
- ^ "Regiment" originally referred to the force the colonel controlled, but by 1550 meant a formation of 3,000–5,000 men.[25]
Citations
[edit]- ^ Rogers 2010, p. 485.
- ^ a b c Jörgensen et al. 2006, p. 11.
- ^ a b Miller 1976, p. 3.
- ^ Axelrod, Alan (2013). Mercenaries: A Guide to Private Armies and Private Military Companies. CQ Press. p. 124. ISBN 9781483364674. Archived from the original on 26 September 2021. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
- ^ Richards 2002, p. 4.
- ^ Trim 2010, p. 59.
- ^ Richards 2002, pp. 4–5.
- ^ Trim 2010, p. 162.
- ^ Querengässer, Alexander (30 September 2021). Before the Military Revolution: European Warfare and the Rise of the Early Modern State 1300–1490. Oxbow Books. p. 152. ISBN 978-1-78925-672-7. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
- ^ Richards 2002, p. 6.
- ^ a b c d Trim 2010, p. 163.
- ^ a b Richards 2002, p. 7.
- ^ Richards 2002, pp. 7–8.
- ^ Richards 2002, p. 51.
- ^ Tucker 2010, p. 481.
- ^ Fuster i Ortells, Joan (1962). Nosaltres, els valencians. Edicions 62. p. 75.
- ^ "H-German Roundtable on Smith, Germany: A Nation in Its Time Before, During, and After Nationalism, 1500–2000 H-German H-Net". networks.h-net.org. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
- ^ Riemann, Malte (2021). ""As Old as War Itself"? Historicizing the Universal Mercenary". Journal of Global Security Studies. 6. doi:10.1093/jogss/ogz069.
- ^ Miller 1976, p. 33.
- ^ a b Karsten 1998, pp. 20–23.
- ^ a b c Miller 1976, pp. 4–5.
- ^ Richards 2002, pp. 9, 10–11, 13–15.
- ^ Jörgensen et al. 2006, p. 11–12.
- ^ a b Richards 2002, p. 10.
- ^ a b Richards 2002, p. 11.
- ^ Richards 2002, pp. 10–11.
- ^ Miller 1976, p. 11.
- ^ a b c d Jörgensen et al. 2006, p. 12.
- ^ Richards 2002, p. 13.
- ^ Axelrod 2013, p. 214.
- ^ Nickel, Helmut; Pyhrr, Stuart W.; Tarassuk, Leonid (1982). The Art of Chivalry: European Arms and Armor from the Metropolitan Museum of Art : an Exhibition. Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York). p. 129. ISBN 978-0-917418-67-9. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
- ^ Miller 1976, pp. 11, 12.
- ^ Miller 1976, p. 12.
- ^ Miller 1976, p. 7.
- ^ Miller 1976, pp. 7–8.
- ^ Rogers 2010, p. 487.
- ^ Jörgensen et al. 2006, p. 8.
- ^ Karsten, Peter (1998). The Training and Socializing of Military Personnel. Taylor & Francis. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-8153-2976-3. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
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References
[edit]- Jörgensen, Christer; Pavkovic, Michael F.; Rice, Rob S.; Schneid, Frederick C.; Scott, Chris L. (2006). Fighting Techniques of the Early Modern World. Thomas Dunne Books. ISBN 0-312-34819-3.
- Miller, Douglas (1976). The Landsknechts. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 0850452589.
- Richards, John (2002). Landsknecht Soldier 1486–1560. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1841762431.
- Rogers, Cliff, ed. (2010). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology. Vol. I. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195334036.
- Trim, D.J.B., ed. (2010). European Warfare 1350–1750. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-88628-4.
- Tucker, Spencer C., ed. (2010). A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East. Vol. II. ABC-CLIO.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Landsknechts at Wikimedia Commons
- "Landsknechte" at Encyclopedia Britannica